Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Bettye Caldwell

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
American

Notable ideas
  
Head Start

Discipline
  
Psychology

Bettye Caldwell UALR Salutes Bettye Caldwell Little Rock Soiree Magazine

Born
  
December 24, 1924 (
1924-12-24
)
Smithville, Texas

Died
  
17 April 2016, St. Louis, Missouri, United States

Books
  
The HOME Inventory: A Training Approach for the UK

Dr bettye caldwell arkansas women s hall of fame 2016 honoree


Bettye McDonald Caldwell (December 24, 1924 – April 17, 2016) was an American educator and academic who influenced the development of Head Start.

Contents

Bettye Caldwell Dr Bettye Caldwell Education Visionary Arkansas Business News

Biography

Bettye Caldwell ualredunewsfiles201102BettyeCaldwelljpg

Caldwell was born in Smithville, Texas, to Thomas and Juanita McDonald. Her family was poor, as her father was a railroad firefighter who lost his job when Caldwell was young. After graduating first in her high school class, Caldwell attended Baylor University, where she was a psychology and speech major. She earned a master's degree at the University of Iowa and a doctorate in psychology at Washington University. After graduate school, Caldwell was on the faculty or staff of several universities, including Northwestern University, Washington University, Syracuse University and SUNY Upstate.

Bettye Caldwell Obituary for Bettye McDonald Caldwell of Little Rock AR

While at Syracuse, Caldwell worked with pediatrician Julius Richmond on child development studies. Finding that poor children trailed off developmentally after the age of one, they created a day care center for children six months to five years of age. As the first infant group day care, the center required a waiver from the state. Caldwell felt that an emphasis on early childhood education could help to "level the playing field" for poor children before they started kindergarten. In 1964, Caldwell and Richmond's work led to the establishment of the Head Start project under Lyndon B. Johnson. Richmond was the first director of the project.

Bettye Caldwell Dr Bettye Caldwell 2012 SECA Friend of Children YouTube

In the late 1960s, Caldwell moved to Arkansas. Working on the faculty of the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, she established the Kramer Project, an initiative establishing a day care center associated with a Little Rock elementary school. Caldwell joined the faculty of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock in 1974. The school made her Donaghey Distinguished Professor in 1978, the same year that she was one of Ladies' Home Journal's 10 Women of the Year. She was named to the faculty of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in 1993.

Bettye Caldwell Bettye Caldwell Syracuse professor who pioneered Head Start dies

She and her husband, Fred Caldwell, had two children. Fred Caldwell died in 2004. Bettye died in April 2016.

Bettye Caldwell Dr Bettye Caldwell on Vimeo

References

Bettye Caldwell Wikipedia